Arizona
Lake, Gallego neck and neck in hypothetical Arizona Senate matchup: Poll
Former gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake (R) and Rep. Ruben Gallego (D) are neck and neck in a new poll of Arizona voter preferences in a hypothetical 2024 Senate matchup.
The survey by Democratic-leaning firm Public Policy Polling, released Wednesday, showed registered voters in Arizona are split when asked to pick between Lake and Gallego in a hypothetical matchup for the U.S. Senate seat — with 45 percent supporting Gallego and 46 percent supporting Lake. Ten percent said they were not sure.
The gap between the two candidates remained tight when respondents were asked about a hypothetical three-way matchup including Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.), who currently holds the seat and has not said whether she plans to run for reelection.
If she does run, the poll suggests Gallego could get more of a boost than Lake. In a hypothetical matchup including all three candidates, Gallego takes a slight lead with 36 percent support, followed by Lake at 35 percent and Sinema at 17 percent. Twelve percent said they were not sure.
The point separating Lake and Gallego in each case is within the margin of error for the poll of +/- 4 percentage points.
Gallego’s support has taken a hit since the firm conducted a similar poll three months ago. The poll was sponsored by the Replace Sinema PAC.
In October 2023, Gallego garnered 48 percent support over Lake’s 43 percent in a hypothetical head-to-head matchup, marking a five-point lead for Gallego compared to Lake’s one-point lead in the new poll. The previous survey also showed 9 percent said they were not sure whom they would select, compared with 10 percent in the most recent one.
The same month, Gallego was found to hold a more commanding lead over Lake in a hypothetical three-way matchup — with 41 percent support compared to Lake’s 36 percent. That five-point lead has narrowed to a one-point lead for Gallego in the recent survey.
Sinema, meanwhile, has seen her support tick up slightly in such a matchup, with 17 percent support in the recent survey, compared to 15 percent in October 2023.
The share of people who said they were not sure who they would vote for in a hypothetical three-way race also increased, with 12 percent unsure in the new poll, compared with 8 percent in October 2023.
The poll was conducted on Jan. 5-6, 2024, and surveyed 590 registered Arizona voters. It was conducted via Interactive Voice Response calls to landlines and texts to cell phones.
Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Arizona
South Alabama pitcher Ryley Harrison transferring to Arizona | ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com
Ryley Harrison, who has established herself as an ace in the circle at South Alabama, has announced she is transferring to Arizona.
The four-time Sun Belt Conference Pitcher of the Week winner made the announcement in a social media post on Friday.
“After much prayer, I’m so happy and overwhelmingly grateful to share that I will continue my academic and athletic career at the University of Arizona,” she said in the post.
Harrison committed to South Alabama in 2024 and led them to a Sun Belt championship and NCAA regional appearance this year.
The Fairhope, Ala., native was 18-14 with a 2.41 ERA this season. She had 204 strikeouts and 76 walks in 206 innings.
She was 31-25 with a 2.90 ERA in 349 2/3 innings in her three years at South Alabama. She had 311 strikeouts and 133 walks.
Arizona
Why test result from bomb scare at Arizona Supreme Court changed later
Tyron “Ty” Keyonnie has been missing since a kayaking trip at Canyon Lake in the Tonto National Forest last week. His truck and camping gear were found at Acacia Recreation Site, and his kayak, phone, keys and bag later turned up elsewhere. Now his family and search crews are looking for answers as authorities ask anyone with information to contact MCSO.
Arizona
5 key takeaways from Arizona Cardinals spring practices
The next time the Arizona Cardinals take the practice field, it will be late July, inside the air conditioning of State Farm Stadium, as training camp gets underway. That’s when the pads will go on and when the arrival of a new season will feel tangible, even as it comes with muted expectations.
But over the past two months, head coach Mike LaFleur and the Cardinals began laying the groundwork for what their 2026 season will look like in 11 spring practice sessions — nine as part of voluntary OTAs, two in mandatory minicamp. Here are the key lessons that we learned during those practices.
Cardinals are healthier than expected
The Cardinals began their spring slate full of question marks surrounding the health of important starters. They ended with almost none.
Defensive tackle Walter Nolen is expected to be ready for the start of training camp, where he’ll aim to build off a promising but injury-riddled rookie season that ended with a torn meniscus. The same goes for tight end Tip Reiman, a key weapon in the run game who suffered a season-ending foot injury last year.
Cornerbacks Sean Murphy-Bunting and Starling Thomas V are already back in practice after missing all of last year with torn ACLs. And the most surprising news centered on nickel Garrett Williams, who has a good chance to be ready for Week 1 despite tearing his Achilles in December.
Really, the only negative on the injury front came with fourth-round rookie defensive tackle Kaleb Proctor, who suffered a torn meniscus during OTAs and could miss the entire season. That’s a big blow, given Proctor’s pass-rushing upside and the Cardinals’ lack of depth at the position, but it shouldn’t overshadow the good news elsewhere.
Rookies are being introduced gradually
In nearly every offensive position group at OTAs and minicamp, there was a trend: highly drafted rookies working behind unheralded veterans.
At running back, Jeremiyah Love worked behind Tyler Allgeier during drills. On the offensive line, Chase Bisontis worked with the backups, while Isaiah Adams operated as the starting right guard. And at quarterback, Kedon Slovis took reps ahead of Carson Beck, who would have been working as the fourth quarterback on the depth chart if not for Jacoby Brissett’s holdout.
It’s early, of course, and the order of practice reps in May and June is not always an accurate predictor of the hierarchy come Week 1. But it was evident throughout camp that LaFleur wants to bring his rookies along gradually — for now.
“I’ve always said, the rookie will be ready when the rookie’s ready,” LaFleur said. “With that being said, this league doesn’t wait around. So there’s a level of urgency that everyone’s gotta have.”
It will be worth watching how quickly that group is able to rise up the depth chart during training camp.
LaFleur’s offense will look new to Cardinals fans
Under former offensive coordinator Drew Petzing, the Cardinals offense was often stagnant. They had the league’s fourth-lowest motion rate and preferred to beat defenses with power, relying on heavy personnel groupings. At its best, it was a bruising, punishing style of offense. At its worst, it was staid and predictable.
Under LaFleur, the overarching offensive philosophy could look quite different. As players were asked to describe his offense over the course of the past month, one clear trend emerged.
“It’s a lot of eye candy, a lot of motions,” linebacker Mack Wilson Sr. said.
“Just the different things that we do with motions and shifts,” wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. said.
“They do a lot, moving around,” safety Dadrion Taylor-Demerson said.
In other words: Expect the Cardinals offense to use motion early and often. That’s no surprise, given that LaFleur’s Rams ranked fourth in usage of pre-snap motion last season, but it will be new in Arizona.
Cody Simon takes lead at linebacker
When the Cardinals signed veteran linebacker Jack Gibbens to a two-year, $7.5 million deal this spring, it seemed as if he could step into a starting role alongside Wilson. But in spring ball, it was second-year linebacker Cody Simon who appeared to have the inside track to that job.
Simon, a 2025 fourth-round pick, stepped in for the injured Wilson last November and struggled at times, taking too long to react to plays in the middle of the field. But by the end of the season, he had gained an increased level of familiarity in coordinator Nick Rallis’ defense — something LaFleur took notice of when studying the Cardinals’ 2025 tape.
“There’s tangible evidence of him, within a game, correcting himself,” LaFleur said. “… And seeing the improvement from one play to maybe 10 plays later. And it’s like, ‘Ooh, he got it right there.’
“He understood that he could have been a little bit better and you saw that. … He gets football.”
Secondary filled with competition for starting spots
At the end of spring camp, the Cardinals’ depth chart has uncertainty at all three positions in the secondary.
With Jalen Thompson gone, Taylor-Demerson appeared to have the inside track to a starting job alongside Budda Baker at safety. Instead, Taylor-Demerson and free agent signing Andrew Wingard have been rotating atop the depth chart, with that competition seemingly set to extend into the summer.
At nickel, the uncertainty depends on Williams’ health. Murphy-Bunting was moved from outside corner to the slot this offseason and figures to be the starter if Williams misses time. But if Williams returns by Week 1, he will likely resume his starting position — so long as he is at his best.
And on the outside, second-year cornerback Will Johnson appears entrenched in one spot, but the other is wide open. Denzel Burke and Max Melton rotated through that spot during OTAs, but Thomas V returned from his torn ACL during minicamp. He, too, could push for starting snaps. With three players competing for one job, it could be among the Cardinals’ fiercest battles during training camp.
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